I n c r e m e n t a l S i t e R e p o r t XYZ Brokerage Field Study Incremental Report Mary C., Customer Los Angeles Began investing one and a half years ago, but grew up in an environment where stocks were a common topic of conversation. Very risky, investing only in technology stocks, usually on margin. Makes 260+ trades per year. Mary is a young, single, self-employed attorney who lives and works in Los Angeles. She averages over 5 trades per week (260+ per year), but recently has been making only 1 3 trades per week. She s had less time to trade during the day because she s covering the case load for an attorney who recently quit. Also, she s been on vacation for several weeks recently. Mary trades only technology stocks, and she considers herself a very risky investor. She buys on margin usually, and currently has a $50,000 margin debt. She has a SEP IRA and a Roth IRA, in conjuction with her brokerage account. She does not trade options. Even though Mary has been investing for only one and a half years, she grew up in a family where stocks and investing was a common topic of conversation, so she feels she knew more than the average beginner before she got started. Both her father and her brother are active traders, and she discusses investments with them often. Mary began investing to build a down payment for a house. She is still looking for a house to buy. In the year and a half that she s been investing, her goals have evolved to include saving for retirement and for a career change. Mary thinks she might like to do something different in the future (like being a writer) and is sure it will pay much less than being an attorney. To achieve her goals, she invests as much as she possibly can, keeping a small balance in her check book to cover day-to-day expenses. On her home computer, Mary has installed XYZ SuperSoftware, but she doesn t use it as much as XYZ Brokerage.com. She had the XYZ SuperSoftware software on her work computer also, but she recently got a different computer and has not reinstalled the software yet. Mary likes paper records. She keeps all of her confirmations and account statements in binders at home. In her day planner, she has several tabbed sections of notes where she records information such as deposits to her account, trades made and stocks that she is watching. 2007 User Interface Engineering. Reproduction Prohibited www.uie.com 1
Demographics Age...36 45 Education...Law degree Job title...attorney Annual salary...$100,000 120,000 Web user...2 years Most-frequent Web access...work Personal hours on Web per day...1 Business hours on Web per day...0 Hours using e-mail per day...15 minutes Connection speed...dsl Other Internet devices...none Investment vehicles...$60,000 SEP IRA, $12,000 Roth IRA, $50,000 brokerage Stock investor...1 year, 260+ trades per year Traditional brokerage...no Online brokerage(s)...xyz Brokerage Favorite Web sites...xyz Brokerage.com Sources of investor information...father, brother, friends, business section of local newspaper, XYZ Brokerage magazine, Silicon Valley News television show, financial shows when channel surfing, XYZ Brokerage.com news articles and charts Tasks by Importance Ranking Task Frequency Time 1 Trade stocks Few times weekly AM 2 Run real-time quotes 3 times daily AM 3 Run charts 3 times daily AM 4 Read financial articles online Once daily AM 5 Monitor portfolio positions and balances Twice daily AM 6 Check watch list (paper-based) Twice daily AM 7 Set up alerts or other automatic information Monthly PM 8 Set up watch lists or customize research Monthly PM 9 Check balance Twice daily AM 10 Verify deposits/withdrawals Monthly PM Look up symbols Weekly PM Read alerts Once daily PM Read analyst reports Weekly PM Run delayed quotes Once daily PM 2 www.uie.com 2007 User Interface Engineering. Reproduction Prohibited
Tasks by Frequency Frequency Task Importance Ranking Time 3 times daily Run real-time quotes 2 AM 3 times daily Run charts 3 AM Twice daily Monitor portfolio positions and balances 5 AM Twice daily Check watch list (paper-based) 6 AM Twice daily Check balance 9 AM Once daily Read financial articles online 4 AM Once daily Read alerts PM Once daily Run delayed quotes PM Few times weekly Trade stocks 1 AM Weekly Look up symbols PM Weekly Read analyst reports PM Monthly Set up alerts or other automatic information 7 PM Monthly Set up watch lists or customize research 8 PM Monthly Verify deposits/withdrawals 10 PM Web Usage In her office, Mary has a Sony VAIO with DVD that someone else in the office complex gave to her as an upgrade to her previous computer. She has a 17 monitor and an HP LaserJet IIIp, as well. Mary has been using the Web for 2 years. She feels that her computer knowledge in general is limited; although, she seemed quite comfortable exploring and using the computer when we observed her perform tasks. XYZ Brokerage.com is the only web site she uses. She uses her computer only for investing and to view software for her job. When asked to recall a task that she had to quit or suspend on XYZ Brokerage.com, she said that 2 or 3 times trades did not go through. She wasn t sure why. She called customer service to resolve the problem. Something I was doing wrong. Brokerage Shopping Mary opened her first XYZ Brokerage account just over a year ago. Mary never expected to trade online. When she opened her account, the XYZ Brokerage representative gave her some print material regarding XYZ Brokerage.com. She didn t think she d use the site because her computer experience is very limited. But, when she read the information, she found that online trading was cheaper and it looked like it would be pretty easy. Prior to going online, she was frustrated with being on hold when she d call to trade. She also liked that she could get company-specific news online. 2007 User Interface Engineering. Reproduction Prohibited www.uie.com 3
The features that are most important to Mary on XYZ Brokerage.com are news, charts, account history, positions and balance. Mary is not really interested in changing brokerages, but price might get her to switch in the future. She s glad that the commission was recently lowered on XYZ Brokerage.com. Information Sources, Flow and Decision Making Mary does all of her investing on the Web at XYZ Brokerage.com. On rare occasion, if she encounters a computer problem or if she is traveling and away from her computers, she will call customer service to place a trade. Her primary sources of information are her father and her brother, who are active traders also. When her dad tells her she should buy something, she will just do it because she knows he does all the necessary research and she trusts him. She also gets information from friends who work at technology companies, the business section of the local newspaper, the Silicon Valley News television program and other financial programs that she might find while channel surfing. Mary does not read or post to message boards, nor does she use web site demos. She didn t know what they were. She does not use any personalized sites either. Mary likes paper records. She keeps confirmations and account statements in binders at home. She transfers the statement data to an Excel spreadsheet for her tax accountant. In her day planner, she has several tabbed sections of notes where she records information like trades made and stocks to watch. She likes having access to this information when away from her computer. Mary tried keeping watch lists online, but didn t like that method because she is so used to writing everything in her day planner. She said she might try online watch lists again in the future. In the evenings, Mary often talks with her father and sometimes her brother. They discuss stocks. The next morning, Mary watches the market, runs charts and reads news articles online on particular stocks. She places market orders from work during the morning once she decides to buy or sell. Occasionally, if her dad or brother gives her a specific buy/sell tip, she ll make the trade from home before she leaves for work. Mary does the more general research on companies in the evening (analyst or earnings reports). She also updates her alerts at the end of the day to add new companies that she s interested in. Mary does not seek out advice from financial professionals. She has a lot of friends who work in Silicon Valley. She learns about technology companies from her friends. She wants her money to be in different areas of technology and telecommunications e.g., semi-conductors, software, wireless, fiber-optic, etc. She looks for sectors that make practical sense. For example, she s heard a lot in the news about hackers breeching computer systems. So, investing in companies that produce security software makes sense to Mary. She also invests in companies that are the pillars of the Internet, like Cisco and Intel (versus Yahoo or Amazon). Mary decides when to buy or sell based on earnings estimates. She gets earnings 4 www.uie.com 2007 User Interface Engineering. Reproduction Prohibited
reports from her father, who gets them from his broker, by calling XYZ Brokerage customer service, or from the Analyst Info on XYZ Brokerage.com but I m not good at using that [Analyst Info]. Sometimes, she will buy and sell the same stock several times. Mary also watches her holdings to see which stocks weather the storm of the market volatility to decide whether to sell or to buy more. Mary visits XYZ Brokerage.com a couple of times each day, mostly in the mornings. She first checks her positions on her 3 accounts to see how particular stocks are doing. She refers to the watch list in her day planner, and then runs quotes on several of the stocks. She also checks margin calls. Mary does not look at the home page, going right for the Login button What is the home page? She didn t know how to get back to the home page once she was logged in. If she could customize a home page, Mary would include the market summary, everything on the login page, hottest news of the day in the technology industry, quotes with news and charts, positions and quick access to a watch list. She d also like the watch list to update automatically. For example, after selling a stock it stays on her watch list for 2 months. If there are no inquiries on that stock, like running quotes, it should be removed. Or, one month after selling, a prompt should ask, Do you want to drop this stock from your watch list? Task Clicks Trade Stocks on XYZ Brokerage.com Selects bookmark for XYZ Brokerage. Clicks Login button without looking at any other part of the Home Page. Logs into Positions page of brokerage account by default. Reviews the positions information. Gets Quotes for several companies. Looks at Charts and News. Decides whether to use available money in account or to buy on margin. Decides whether to buy a new stock or to buy more of an equity she already owns. Clicks Trade link on line item for one of her positions. Fills trade page fields. Clicks Submit button. Clicks Order Status link to make sure order is filled. Opens day timer and logs transaction on appropriate note page (date, time, what bought). Task Clicks Research on XYZ Brokerage.com Selects XYZ Brokerage.com from the recently used URLs drop-down list on the browser. Clicks Login button. Logs in to Positions (her default start page). Enters ticker symbol for Quote. Clicks Chart link in Quote bar. Selects 5-day chart and reviews. Clicks News link in Quote bar. Reads latest articles. 2007 User Interface Engineering. Reproduction Prohibited www.uie.com 5
If she doesn t know much about a company, or if she wants to validate information from another source (like a friend), she ll use the Analyst Info page: Clicks Quotes & Research tab. Clicks Analyst Info link. Enters symbol and clicks Go button. Clicks Earnings Estimates and downloads. Clicks Earnings Valuations and downloads. Clicks Analyst Reports and downloads desired report(s). Experience and Satisfaction with XYZ Brokerage Mary feels that XYZ Brokerage.com is hard to deal with conceptually. She indicated that working with multiple accounts is difficult, and that updating watch lists is a lot of work and a hassle. She d like her watch list to update as she trades. She reads about features in mailings from XYZ Brokerage, but can t always find them on the site. Mary feels that there is more information, advice and guidance available than she knows how to access. She said she d like someone to show her how. But, she feels that the features she s learned and uses most are easy to use. Trades are done quickly. Checking order status and running quotes were easy to learn. When asked whether she uses quick links, Mary first said she didn t know what they were. When she saw them on a page, she said, Oh, this! Yeah, great, you don t have to click as many places. They re convenient. Later, she wondered why quick links aren t on every page. Mary does not use any help features on XYZ Brokerage.com. She likes the terminology used on the site. She likes the XYZ Brokerage magazine even more, using the glossary there. She also finds the people on the phone to be helpful. Prior to getting the DSL, Mary was frustrated by the slowness of working with the site. The slowness problem is part of the reason why she stopped using and updating her watch list online. Because of her inexperience with computers, she didn t initially realize that most of the problem was with her hardware and not the site itself. She even installed XYZ SuperSoftware because it looked more user-friendly and simple, but found that it didn t solve the slowness problem. She thought trading was easier on XYZ SuperSoftware and that the graphics were easier to look at, but she didn t like refreshing the data. Once she got the DSL and solved the slowness problem, she didn t see any advantages to using XYZ SuperSoftware over XYZ Brokerage.com. (She has not installed XYZ SuperSoftware on her new work computer.) Mary mentioned a problem with multiple trades that really frustrates her. After she places the first trade, she checks the order status. From the order status page, she says she clicks the Trade button to place another trade. When she checks the order status of the second trade, she says there is not a Trade button anymore. So, she can t place a third trade from the order status page. In essence, she says, it s difficult to check the order status between trades when trying to make multiple trades quickly. 6 www.uie.com 2007 User Interface Engineering. Reproduction Prohibited